A traditional Tamil Brahmin wedding (Iyer / Iyengar) typically spans three days and features around 30 distinct rituals. Non-Brahmin Tamil weddings vary by community — Mudaliar, Pillai, Chettiar, Nadar — but the core structure is similar: rituals to bless the couple, unite two families, and acknowledge ancestors and divine witnesses.
பாரம்பரிய தமிழ் பிராமண திருமணம் (ஐயர் / ஐயங்கார்) பொதுவாக மூன்று நாட்களில் சுமார் 30 தனித்துவமான சடங்குகளைக் கொண்டிருக்கும். பிராமணரல்லாத தமிழ் திருமணங்கள் — முதலியார், பிள்ளை, செட்டியார், நாடார் — சமூகத்தைப் பொறுத்து வேறுபடும், ஆனால் அடிப்படை அமைப்பு ஒத்தது.
Pre-wedding rituals
திருமணத்திற்கு முன் சடங்குகள்
- நிச்சயதார்த்தம் (Engagement) — மோதிரம் மாற்றம், தேதி உறுதி
- பந்தக்கால் (Pandhakkal) — மரத்தூண் நட்டு, பெரியோர் ஆசீர்வாதம்
- நலங்கு (Nalangu) — மஞ்சள் குளியல், விளையாட்டு
- Sumangali Prarthanai — திருமண பெண்களின் ஆசீர்வாதம் கேட்கும் சடங்கு
Wedding day — main rituals
The wedding ceremony itself, called Vivaha or Kalyanam, has several signature moments. Each has theological grounding and was historically a witness — meaning, it had to be performed in front of family and elders to be considered valid.
1. Kasi Yatra
The bridegroom playfully announces he will renounce worldly life and walk to Kashi (Varanasi) to study the Vedas. The bride's father then "stops" him by promising his daughter's hand in marriage — a much better life option. This ritual celebrates education and learning while symbolically marking the groom's decision to enter householder life (grihastha).
2. Maalai Maatral (Garland exchange)
Bride and groom exchange flower garlands three times. In some communities, the men of each family lift the bride and groom up so they can compete to garland each other — adding playful theatre to the moment of acceptance.
3. Oonjal (Swing ceremony)
The couple sits on a flower-decorated swing while elders sing songs and offer them milk and fruit. The gentle to-and-fro motion symbolises the inevitable ups and downs of life — the couple must move together through both.
4. Kanyadaanam
The bride's father (or guardian) ceremonially gives her hand to the groom. Sacred water is poured over the joined hands while mantras are chanted. Many modern Tamil families have moved away from the traditional framing of "giving away" — recasting it as a blessing of partnership.
5. Mangalya Dhaaranam (Tying the Thali)
The most important moment. The groom ties the mangalsutra (called thali in Tamil) — usually a yellow thread or gold chain with a pendant — around the bride's neck while three knots are made (one by the groom, two by his sister). The Nadhaswaram and Thavil (traditional South Indian wind and percussion) build to a crescendo. The thali becomes the lifelong symbol of the marriage.
தாலியின் வடிவங்கள்
ஒவ்வொரு குலத்துக்கும் தாலி வடிவம் வேறுபடும்: ஐயர்களுக்கு குழந்தை-வடிவ பொட்டு, ஐயங்கார்களுக்கு திருநாமம், செட்டியார் — பெரிய தாலி, நாடார் — மீன் வடிவம், பிள்ளை — சங்கு, etc.
6. Saptapadi (Seven steps)
The couple walks seven steps together around the sacred fire. With each step, a vow is exchanged — for nourishment, strength, prosperity, happiness, children, and lifelong companionship. According to Hindu law, the marriage is considered legally complete after the seventh step.
1
Nourishment
May we provide for each other
2
Strength
May we develop strength together
3
Wealth
May we share prosperity
4
Happiness
May we share happiness
5
Family
May we be blessed with children and family
6
Long life
May we have a long life together
7
Friendship
May we forever remain best friends
Post-wedding
Sammandhi Maryadhai — formal exchange of gifts between the two families. Then, the most emotional moment: bride leaves with her husband's family. In modern times, this is symbolic — the bride returns home regularly, especially for Pongal and other festivals. Reception (some families hold one) is often held the same evening at a hotel or hall.
Modern Tamil weddings are evolving — destination weddings, "registered" simple ceremonies, inter-caste/inter-faith marriages, eco-friendly celebrations. But the core rituals — thali, saptapadi, oonjal — survive, performed often by the same families that have used them for centuries.
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